“For the good of the party, we believe Dave Agema should resign,” Priebus and Schostak said Friday in a joint statement to the Detroit Free Press.

The party leaders previously condemned Agema's remarks without calling for him to step down. They join three House members from Michigan and other prominent state Republicans who have already publicly called for Agema's resignation.

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette also called for Agema's resignation Friday, according to the Detroit News.

@SchuetteOnDuty: “I have spoken with @DaveAgema concerning the turmoil and challenge confronting him and ... encouraged him to resign..."

The committee member deliberately planned to skip the Republican Winter Meeting in Washington, D.C., where the country's GOP leaders gathered Friday to vote on party rules, in protest of his "liberal critics."

"My liberal critics within the Republican Party have chosen to elevate this discussion to the RNC Meeting and make it a drawn out fight between liberals and conservatives within the party," Agema said in a statement explaining his decision. "For this reason, I have decided it is best for the party that I not attend the meeting this week and instead I have sent a proxy who will vote how I want on Rules."
Michigan Gov. Rick Synder and U.S. Senate candidate Terri Lynn Land, the state's other national committee member, have also condemned Agema's comments but have not yet called for his resignation, according to the Free Press. Agema has not announced any intention to step down.